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MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -
Carlos Silva
heard cheers Friday night as he has many times before when he left the Metrodome mound and headed for the dugout. This time,
the fans weren't applauding for him.
Jason Kubel
homered and had three RBIs in the seven-run fourth inning and the
Minnesota Twins
beat up on their former teammate in a 9-3 win. The Twins have won six of eight since losing two straight in Seattle last week,
and this time it was Silva standing in the way of a victory.
''We've got to get wins from here on out. It doesn't matter if it's against a friend or someone else,'' Kubel said.
Francisco Liriano
allowed no earned runs in seven solid innings for Minnesota, which began the night one game behind Chicago in the AL Central.
Liriano is returning to dominant form while Silva continues to struggle like never before.
Facing his former team for the first time, Silva tied a career high by allowing nine earned runs and lost for a league-leading
14th time. After starting the season 3-0, he has won just once in his last 21 starts. In the eight starts since his June 28
win, Silva is 0-5 with an 8.03 ERA.
''He just doesn't seem to be able to get the big pitch to get that ground ball when he needs it. That's been his story pretty
much all year,'' Seattle pitching coach
Mel Stottlemyre
said. ''We just know that he has the ability but it's not coming out right now. It was very difficult today. Especially against
his old team.''
Minnesota sent 12 batters to the plate in the fourth inning, sending Silva to the showers. The 3 1-3 innings was his fifth
shortest start of the year.
Kubel's two-run homer got the inning started, and
Adam Everett
,
Denard Span
and
Nick Punto
had RBI singles before Silva was replaced by
Jake Woods
, who gave up RBI singles to
Joe Mauer
and Kubel. The eight hits were Minnesota's most in an inning since it had eight April 5, 2005, at Seattle.
''We know what he's got and he knows about us,'' Kubel said. ''We just made him work and he got his pitches up.''
Silva (4-14) won 47 games for the Twins from 2004-07 before signing a 4-year, $48 million contract with Seattle in December.
He refused to talk with reporters after the game.
In winning his third straight start since being recalled from Triple-A Rochester, Liriano (3-3) wasn't overpowering - he had
just five strikeouts - but effectively kept the ball down in the zone. The Mariners grounded out 13 times against him.
''I'm feeling more comfortable with my fastball, and my changeup is working, too. I feel good to be out there,'' he said.
Manager
Ron Gardenhire
said that Liriano needed to keep throwing his fastball for strikes, which the left-hander did with Minnesota comfortably in
front.
''As long as he keeps it up he'll really help us down the stretch,'' Kubel said.
The Twins pounded their former teammate early and often.
Silva, who questioned the commitment of some of his teammates after his last start a week ago, had only himself to blame for
putting the Mariners in an early hole.
Span led off the Minnesota first with a double that bounced high off the center-field wall. Two pitches later Punto hit an
RBI double to left-center. He scored on a sacrifice fly by
Justin Morneau
.
''He has great bullpen sessions, but if you leave the ball thigh high you're going to get hit,'' Seattle manager Jim Riggleman
said.
Seattle, which lost for the fifth time in six games, tied the game in the fourth when Minnesota's
Brian Buscher
booted a ground ball by
Wladimir Balentien
, allowing two runs to score.
Raul Ibanez
scored on a double play in the ninth.
Riggleman was ejected in the fifth inning after arguing with first base umpire Mark Wegner.
Ichiro Suzuki
dropped the ball while transferring it from his glove to his throwing hand, and Wegner ruled the ball was not caught. It was
Riggleman's first ejection of the season.
''You guys can tell by looking at the play. I don't want to go into details,'' Suzuki said through an interpreter.
Notes: Silva last allowed nine earned runs on April 29, 2006, at Detroit. ... Minnesota is 26-8 at home since June 1. ...
Suzuki was 0-for-4 to end a 20-game hitting streak against Minnesota, dating back to May 1, 2006. ... Minnesota 2B
Alexi Casilla
, out since July 29 with a torn ligament in his right thumb, took some ground balls, threw without pain and hit off a tee
Friday. The switch-hitter said he felt 100 percent hitting right-handed and 85 percent hitting left-handed. He hopes to hit
soft toss Saturday and take full batting practice Monday. ... The last Minnesota player to get two hits in an inning was
Josh Rabe
on July 21, 2006, at Cleveland.
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